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Cardiac response induced by voluntary self-paced finger
movement.
Florian G, Stancák A, Pfurtscheller G.
Ludwig Boltzmann-Institute of Medical Informatics and
Neuroinformatics, Graz,Austria.
Int J Psychophysiol. 1998 May;28(3):273-83.
Cardiac responses induced by slow and brisk voluntary
self-paced index finger movements of the dominant and
non-dominant hand were investigated in a group of
12 right-handed subjects.
Since subjects synchronised movement and respiration,
initiating movement preferably during inspiration, a
novel method of evaluating the movement-induced cardiac
response was used. This method allows one to distinguish
the differential effects on the cardiac response due to
movement and respiration.
The effect of type of movements (slow vs. brisk) and hand
(right vs. left) were analysed. Slow movements induced a
monophasic cardiac response, consisting of cardiac
deceleration preceding and accompanying movement.
Brisk movements induced a biphasic cardiac response,
consisting of preparatory deceleration followed by slight
post-movement cardiac acceleration. Hand-dominance did not
influence the movement-induced cardiac response. The
results suggest that neocortical structures involved
in planning and execution of voluntary movement impinge
upon brainstem cardiovascular nuclei. Vagal cardiac
outflow is affected and gives rise to movement-induced
changes in cardiac chronotropism.
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